Republican Miller-Meeks, Democrat Bohannan head for rematch in Iowa congressional race

  • Summary
WASHINGTON, June 2 (Reuters) – Republican U.S. Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks won renomination in Iowa’s first ​congressional district on Tuesday, positioning the incumbent congresswoman ​for her third general election contest against Democrat ⁠Christina Bohannan.
Miller-Meeks, a 70-year-old physician and three-term House Republican, ​defeated MAGA Republican challenger David Pautsch, according to U.S. ​media reports. Democrat Bohannan overcame Travis Terrell to clinch her party’s nomination, media projected.
Miller-Meeks is one of the most vulnerable House Republicans ​at a time when high prices for gasoline ​and other consumer products and an unpopular war against Iran have ‌sent President ⁠Donald Trump’s approval ratings lower, even among Republicans.
Bohannan, a 54-year-old University of Iowa law professor and former state representative, has run unsuccessfully twice against Miller-Meeks. In 2024, she ​lost to ​the incumbent by ⁠only about 800 votes. Her campaign is focused on affordability, expanding healthcare coverage ​and reversing Medicaid cuts from Trump’s One Big ​Beautiful ⁠Bill Act.
Miller-Meeks and Bohannan will square off in November in a contest that independent analysts have rated a toss-up. ⁠Each ​candidate has more than $4 million ​in cash on hand, according to the latest documents filed with the ​Federal Election Commission.

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